¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Angiomata
1. angioma [n] - See also: angioma
Lexicographical Neighbors of Angiomata
Literary usage of Angiomata
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on the theory and practice of medicine by John Syer Bristowe (1879)
"Vascular Tumors, or angiomata. Several of the tumors which have already been
described, ... angiomata may be conveniently divided into two species, ..."
2. Manual of Diseases of the Ear, Nose, and Throat by John Johnson Kyle (1911)
"angiomata are vascular tumors, which occur infrequently in the nose. ...
angiomata of the nasal cavity may give rise to nasal obstruction and sensations of ..."
3. The Pathology and surgical treatment of tumors by Nicholas Senn (1900)
"Intracranial angiomata.—Demme has described blood-cysts of the superior ...
Intracranial angiomata may belong to blood-cysts of bone developed from the vasa ..."
4. Pathology and treatment of diseases of the skin: For Practitioners and Students by Moriz Kaposi (1895)
"angiomata. NEOPLASMS OP THE BLOOD VESSELS AND LYMPHATICS. ... New formations of
blood vessels (angiomata proper) show their anatomical structure by their ..."
5. An introduction to pathology and morbid anatomy by Thomas Henry Green (1884)
"... AND angiomata. THE MYOMATA. THE Myomata are tumours consisting of muscular
tissue. A new formation of muscle has been already described as being ..."
6. Skin and Venereal Diseases (1918)
"At the time the case was reported, the patient was having radium treatment, from
which good results were expected. angiomata. ..."
7. The Journal of Laryngology and Rhinology (1888)
"The writer has met with an undoubted case of cancer accompanying tertiary syphilis
of the larynx. (To be continued.) ON angiomata OF THE LARYNX. ..."
8. Diseases of the digestive organs: With Special Reference to Their Diagnosis by Charles Dettie Aaron (1921)
"Their favorite site is the lips, especially at the external surface and the red
part. When these growths become larger they develop into cavernous angiomata ..."